Despite a positive opening to the campaign, Hearts were always up against it, kicking off with a 15-point penalty and
a signing embargo.

“The worst goal difference belongs to Livingston in 2005-06, when they lost 54 goals more than they scored”

And, with only nine league games to go, they remain firmly rooted to the bottom of the pile, 21 points adrift of 11th place.

While relegation was likely before a ball was kicked, will Hearts be taking some unwanted records with them when they exit the top flight?

A promising start from Gary Locke's callow side had fans dreaming of a great escape as seven points were accrued from the first four games and it looked as though Hearts had the potential to make life interesting at the bottom end of the table.

However, that early optimism quickly faded, with only six points taken from a possible 42 from September to December, without a single win in seven home fixtures.

Lowest points tally

With only one point from a possible 15 to close out the opening half of the season, Hearts were flirting with the lowest points tally since the top division was rebranded in 1998.

In season 2005-06, Livingston were relegated with a mere 18 points. Two seasons later, Gretna finished bottom with a record-setting low of 13 points. On the field, Gretna actually earned 23 points, losing 10 points as the penalty for going into administration.

Halfway lows

13-14
Hearts
P19 W3 D4 L12 GD -20 Pts -2

07-08
Gretna
P19 W2 D4 L13 GD -27 Pts 10

05-06
Livingston
P19 W2 D6 L11 GD -25 Pts 12

After taking 12 points from their opening 19 matches in 2005-06, Livingston went into meltdown, losing 17 of their 19 matches in the second half of the season.

Manager Paul Lambert left in February 2006 after seven consecutive defeats and his replacement, John Robertson, could not prevent relegation.

Gretna actually had a better second half of the season in terms of points and those were secured against a backdrop of unrest caused by unpaid wages and the resignation of manager Davie Irons.

However, administration led to them being reduced to six points after 28 games and, with a win on the final day against Hearts, they finished with an official count of 13.

As 2014 started with a derby defeat at Easter Road, Hearts needed more than 16 points to avoid the lowest-ever tally.

A win at Ross County on 25 January finally took Hearts into positive points and another first quickly followed - a come-from-behind win over St Mirren.

Second-half run-ins

05-06
Livingston
P19 W2 D0 L17 GD -29 Pts 6

07-08
Gretna
P19 W3 D4 L13 GD -24 Pts 13

Since then, however, Hearts have taken only one point from four Premiership fixtures and now require eight points from their final matches to get past Gretna's unwanted record.

As well as recording the lowest official points tally, Gretna also conceded 83 goals in 2007-08 - equalling Aberdeen's total conceded in 1999-2000. However, Aberdeen lost their 83 goals in 36 games, Gretna played 38.

All about goals

The worst goal difference belongs to Livingston in 2005-06. They lost 54 goals more than they scored, with 25 for and 79 against.

Surprisingly, the 25 goals scored in 38 games is not the lowest number scored in a campaign. In 2010-11, St Johnstone managed only 23 goals but finished eighth.

With a goal difference of -20 after 19 games, Hearts were in a better position than both Livingston and Gretna at the halfway stage and, with 29 games gone, the men in maroon have scored 25 goals and have conceded 54.

Record books

Hearts have had to play a campaign with what at times has resembled little more than an Under-20s side and still the club remains in administration as courtrooms in Lithuania wrangle over the financial mess left behind by former Tynecastle owner Vladimir Romanov.

The circumstances have been trying for those left to pick up the pieces, but record books ignore circumstances.

These are simply the cold, hard stats when it comes to finishing bottom.

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Comments

@hardstyle mind that idiot is on here all day sittin in his pants. Anyway ye Alloa are stable . Shire movin to Grangemouth I think, but still too many teams as pro's. Its still 16/16 for me with regional feeders, but Turkeys dont vote for xmas

Although a Englishman, I have no pleasure in seeing the Scottish league falling apart. To see a 75 point gap between top and bottom in a 12 team league, and a title already won by 24 points is unfair on the clubs and most of all the supporters, Football needs to be a competition. I remember the 70's and 80's when the SFA was interesting not just a side show to be ridiculed.Hopefully it gets better

116 Times someone has been crowned champion, 98 of these are split between 2 power hungry teams, The remaining wins (17 of them as Dumbarton managed a co-winner position) are split between every other team up there.Now with Rangers out of the picture quality will slip due to lack of genuine competition.

@hardstyle that guy was a decent player..nuts tho obviously Alloa? think its shut. @fooyball understand yep look forward to it and it will be good for Hearts as it was when they went down before..fans like good comp and winning and tv will also love it

Just in case the rest of you ever wonder, no Hearts fan will ever forgive St Mirren for failing to turn up on 3rd May 1986. Ask any Hearts fan whether he'd rather see Hibs relegated or the Buddies, and the answer might surprise you.

By the way, Red Buddie, when you don't understand insolvency, try not to show your ignorance too much on sites like these. It kind of reflects badly on St Mirren.

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